The only people who claim Intellectual Property isn't real or shouldn't be respected also tend to be the same people who cant support themselves off of intellectual pursuits.
Why is it always the second someone doesnt personally benefit from a right, any right, is the moment they think that right should be abolished?
IP is artificial scarcity, which IMO is not beneficial to society at large and actually hinders progress instead of promoting it.
I acknowledge that there are lots of shades of gray in this, but it's generally how I consider IP.
BTW, as a software developer I absolutely could embrace IP in order to make money. I choose not to.
@jcbrand @freemo I personally see it as a threat to culture, knowledge and art. If something is not seen as profitable enough, if it's more useful and/or inspiring than initially perceived, we lose public or any access to the wonders of the world. It'd be like tearing up the cure for cancer or blowing up historical sites.
I would, at the very least, prefer a wider implementation of copycentre or copyleft licensing if eradicating copyright isn't immediately possible.
That's rhetoric @freemo, not intent.
The sole goal of patents is to reinforce the existing power structure of society so that no innovation can suddenly challenge it.
Think about numbers: who is going to fill more patents claim? Who is going to defend them in courts?
Inventors (and authors, for copyright law) are just excuses to justify laws that slow down progress and culture just to maximise the profit and the power of the riches.
Are we talking about the founding fathers of the most powerful military nation of the world?
The one with the most unequal distribution of wealth?
The one still torn by structural racism?
Yes, I think we can agree: those founding fathers were very intentional with such laws, as they were with the American vision of freedom.
A freedom without equality whose goal is to let the powerfuls strive and the weaks... work or die.
We are talking about the founding fathers of a nation that didnt beleive in a standing army or powerful military. The ones that intended all men to be created equal, and the same founding fathers who actively petitioned to abolish slavery (well most of them) long before it was even a thought in most people's minds.
You seem to be horribly confused about the difference between original intent and eventual outcome. They are not they are not remotely the same thing.
Don't know...
It's either me that is confused about intent and outcome...
Or it's you that are confused between intent and propaganda.
It is very obviously you who are the one who is confused. That is obvious by the counter-arguments you gave which all only became true long after the founding fathers deaths, all of which were strongly opposed by the founding fathers during their life.
Not only are you confusing intent and outcome, but you are also confusing words spoken sincerely when they were first spoken by the founding fathers with the fact that modern day corrupt individuals may wield those words as propaganda to use to their own advantage. Something can be true, and therefore not propaganda, when it was first spoken, and then later become untrue long after the persons death and used as propaganda.. You seem to be confusing this as well.
In short, it is clear the intent of patents were to protect individual rights, it is also clear that intent as vocalized by the founding fathers was not propaganda. That is not contrary to the fact that the system of laws in the present day have been changed in ways that no longer sufficiently protect individual rights, and are contrary to the intent of patents. At the same time the words of the founding fathers may be used as propaganda to hide the fact that the current system around patents no longer reflects its intent.
In other words, I argue that patents and copyrights were designed to work exactly as they work in practice.
All you described is just their propaganda, the way they sold them to people through the illusion of the American dream.
The history of Meucci and Bell shows well how that's just rhetoric.
Implying the founding fathers long held beleifs and statements with almost no counter evidence to suggest they werent sincere is just "propaganda" seems quite absurd to me. It is clear to anyone who has studied their writings and life in any detail, including their personal letters, that the intentions they held were absolutely sincere.
A prime example is when you claimed the USA had the strongest army in the world. Yet the founding fathers put explicit laws in place that made standing armies against the constitution, and in fact throughout most of their life they fought to uphold that rule and the nation in fact did not have a standing army during that time. It wasn't until long after their death that standing armies became the norm.
It is apparent and quite obvious the founding fathers were not just making these statements as propaganda but in fact did everything in their power to ensure they were the reality for america. The fact that america no longer reflects that ideal, which didn't come about till long after their death, in no way is suggestive that their words were propaganda or lacked any sincerity.
Let's put this way: if you are right (and the document you've read were authentic) and their ideals didn't last among their people after their death, they were blind to their people.
Even so, it was their people who created the world we know without violating their laws.
I think they should be held accountable for this.
But at the end of the day, does it metter what they belived?
They proved beyond any reasonable doubt that such kind of laws are going to be abused to justify, normalize and freeze inequities by the people of USA.
Thus why should we try again if they failed so bad too?
You can easily change the laws, but not the people.
Better to abolish a law that is doomed to be abused most of times.
No, founding fathers should not be held responsible for what a free and democratic society does after their death, and yes it does matter.
Any system of laws, so long as those laws are part of a democratic system, can be corrupted to something evil if the population does not vote in a way that upholds the original intention.
You can have the perfect set of laws codified for an ideal society and if everyone is too misguided to see that and vote to abolish those laws and replaced them with something ineffective, then the result will be a corrupt system. There is literally nothing the original creators of the law could do that would prevent that.
Any democratic system of government will only ever be as good as the people that make up that system. The best we can hope for is to ensure the populace continues to hold the correct ideals, and when they dont and the system becomes corrupt, strive to reassert the original ideals that were superior and put it on the right track again.
@Shamar
Bull, the Patent Act was passed one year after the constitution was rattified. It was as much a part of the founding fathers intentions as the constitution itself. If one thing is clear the founding fathers intentions was always a structure that focused on individual rights first and foremost.
As such it is quite clear the original intention of patent law and patents was to enable individual rights, not diminish them.
While you're most welcome to argue that the intention of patents aren't being realized under current laws, and in some ways I would agree with you, to argue the intention of patents were not to enable individual liberties is clearly not the case for anyone who has studied the intentions of the founding fathers that enacted it.
@freeloader2020 @jcbrand